Tips & Tricks

Why You Should Use an MTProto Proxy Instead of a VPN for Telegram

A practical comparison: when a free Telegram proxy is enough and when you actually need a paid VPN.

The basic difference

A VPN tunnels every byte your device sends, no matter which app generates it. A Telegram MTProto proxy tunnels only Telegram traffic. For most Telegram-only use cases, the proxy is faster, free and easier to set up.

When the proxy is enough

If your only goal is to keep Telegram working when your ISP throttles or blocks it, a proxy is sufficient. This covers the vast majority of users in Iran, Russia, the UAE, Pakistan, Turkey and Belarus. The proxy also covers people who want Telegram to feel snappy on a flaky network without paying for a VPN.

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Browse the live country grid on the home page and tap any card to connect Telegram in one second — no signup, no logs.

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When you need a real VPN

A VPN is necessary if you also need to access other blocked services (Twitter/X, YouTube, Western news sites in restrictive regions), if you want to mask your IP from every website you visit, or if you operate in a high-risk profession where blanket traffic protection matters. VPNs also let you appear in a different country for streaming services.

Cost comparison

TGFast: free, forever. Mainstream commercial VPNs: $4-13 per month, $48-156 per year. For a Telegram-only user, that is $48-156 saved.

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Battery and performance

A full VPN tunnel adds 5-15% battery drain on mobile because every app constantly negotiates over the encrypted layer. An MTProto proxy adds essentially nothing because only Telegram routes through it. On a 24-hour test, an iPhone 14 Pro on a paid VPN drained 14% more battery than the same phone with a TGFast proxy doing the same Telegram workload.

Combining the two

You can absolutely use both at once: enable your VPN system-wide and add the MTProto proxy on top inside Telegram. The double layer is overkill for most users but provides extreme reliability in heavily censored regions. It does add 30-100 ms of extra latency.

When NOT to use a free proxy

Free proxies from unknown operators can be malicious — though as discussed in the previous article, MTProto proxies cannot read your messages, they can still log connection metadata. Use only well-known operators with published privacy policies. TGFast publishes ours at tgfast.top/privacy.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — there is no premium plan, no data cap, no email signup and no injected advertising. We run our proxy fleet on donated bandwidth and infrastructure; the only request is that you join our channel @FastTGProxyMT so we can notify you of IP rotations or planned maintenance.
Yes. Every TGFast guide is reviewed on a 30-day cadence and the proxy addresses on this page are checked every five minutes by our automated monitor. If any server stops responding the page is updated within minutes and a notice is posted to the channel.
No. An MTProto proxy is purpose-built for Telegram and only routes Telegram traffic, which means your other apps stay on your normal connection — faster page loads, better battery life, and no risk of leaking unrelated traffic through a proxy you don't control.
Open the home page on a desktop browser — the live latency widget pings each of our proxy fleet from your location and ranks them. Pick whichever shows the lowest number; you can switch in two taps inside Telegram if conditions change later.
Yes. The proxy is a network transport only; all data, contacts, channels and message history live in your Telegram cloud account. switching between TGFast proxies (or any other) re-establishes the link without any visible disruption to your conversations.
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